London Philharmonic Orchestra - Myer Freedman & Raymond Leppard, direction
L**N
Simply the best
I bought both these recordings when they appeared on vinyl, and it is a joy to have them again in this re-mastered form on CD. The First Symphony is very good indeed, but the recording of the Seventh has yet to be bettered. The Seventh is the most elusive of all Bax's symphonies, with its quickly changing moods and tempi, and it sets a real challenge to a conductor to hold it together and make its structure clear. In this vintage performance Raymond Leppard succeeds at every point, and his choice of tempi is faultless. The Epilogue which ends the symphony is some of the most haunting music written in modern times, and Leppard makes you hold your breath at its sheer beauty. There have been good performances of the work recorded more recently, notably that of David Lloyd Jones on Naxos, but Leppard's version is the one to go for - and the sound is as fresh as if it was recorded yesterday.
G**M
Old Friends Sounding Better than Ever
I have owned the original Lyrita LPs for more than thirty years and have always preferred them to later recordings. I purchased Bryden Thomson's complete set of the Bax symphonies on Chandos but was disappointed with them, both as performances and recordings: a tendency by Thomson to linger on detail instead of keeping the music moving, and therefore giving support to those who say that these marvellous works are rhapsodic and lack form, and recorded sound which was far too reverberant, even noisy and therefore tiring on the ear. I have also been a little disappointed on the whole with the late Vernon Handley's much praised set, which seems to me to keep things moving a little too much sometimes!For me, and many others, these Lyrita recordings remain as benchmarks by which all others must be judged. And on CD these excellent recordings sound better than ever. I would say the same about the other Bax symphonies from Lyrita.
A**H
ESSENTIAL
Amongst the best performances available of both these works, perhaps the best. Fredman adopts a powerful and dynamic approach to the 1st symphony driving the orchestra hard and it responds with high quality playing - he really pushes the pagan dance element to the fore as it should be. Equally Leppard - outside his usual repertoire - makes a good case for the lesser work of the 7th and produces also a dynamic, enjoyable and well played performance. The recording was very good for its day. An essential CD for Baxians.
D**K
A fine Bax reissue from Lyrita (welcome back!)
The music of the English composer, Sir Arnold Bax (1883-1953) fell into a severe decline after his death. Nearly 40 years ago, the Lyrita record company began recording many of his works, including the symphonies (except No.4)and today most of Bax's music can be found on CD. Between 1921 and 1939, he wrote seven symphonies containing music of great range - sometimes brutal, sometimes sublimely lyrical. They show Bax to be a master of the orchestra, creating original textures to build a brooding atmosphere or sparkling sea-scape.The first symphony on this CD is No.1. It originated as a piano sonata which Bax found cried out for orchestral dress. Like the first three symphonies, it is a dark work, redolent of dim northern climes. A threatening, rhythmic 5-note figure is hammered out and this features prominently later. The mood of desolation permeates the whole movement. The second begins mysteriously, with thrumming harps and low brass, showing the composer's skills and imagination in tone painting. The gloom is gradually dispersed and the music evolves into a shattering climax. A beautiful 'liturgical' theme arises, often on muted strings and the thrumming harps reappear to close the movement. The last movement (Bax preferred the 3-movement format) commences with a jolly, scherzo-like episode. Thematic material from the opening of the symphony creeps in in lyrical dress, totally devoid of threat and it is this which, in grand fashion, finishes the symphony.The 7th, and last, symphony (here conducted by Raymond Leppard) begins like a walk on a windy day. The music is invigorating and highly rhythmic and a characteristic recurring melodic cell is heard. Later the music broadens out into a more ceremonial vein but then subsides, with flurries of the wind, into a quiet close. The slow movement is not one of Bax's best - his rich inventiveness seems to have deserted him and even the tunes do not sound like his. It is lovely but in a rather 'generic' way. The finale consists of a theme and variations, and an epilogue. There are beauties here but the epilogue, compared to that of the 3rd symphony, is not up to his usual standard. Maybe he felt this himself for he wrote very little after this.The performances by Myer Fredman, Raymond Leppard and the London Philharmonic Orchestra are first rate and the recordings wear their age lightly (1971, 1975). I think these were world premiere recordings - Lyrita did not normally mention these vulgar facts.There have been several complete cycles recorded since these, all good, but the present recommendation has to be that by Vernon Hanley with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra (Chandos).
T**E
I was not disappointed, as both Symphonies are beautiful and the recordings ...
Heard a movement of the First Symphony on Radio 3 (not this version) but having looked at various reviews thought I'd buy the Lyrita. I was not disappointed, as both Symphonies are beautiful and the recordings are in the best Lyrita tradition.
S**P
Bax is making wax
The First Symphony leads off with a rather banal main theme which nevertheless ends up working quite well and is the unifying element for the whole piece . The Seventh is a more difficult nut to crack and all three movements maintain a listless quality with elements of romanticism weaving in and out . The music is rather diffuse and it requires repeated listening to get any kind of overall impression but this is an excellent version with incisive playing and plenty of much needed panache .
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